I recall something like this going on in one of the Zatoichi films, backdrop was a window of some sort, somewhat resembling horizontal blinds. Once or twice elsewhere also.Orlac wrote:That goof is also on the BFI BD - it looks quite different to the Criterion, with incorrect black levels, but much better contrast.Ogre Kovacs wrote:I was doing a re-watch of the 2006 DVD re-issue from Criterion and noticed something strange that I did not notice before. Right at the beginning of Chapter 8 at 32:44 into the film, there is a gentleman sweeping in front of a square backdrop. The edge of him appears squared out like the background. I took some fast screen shots to show the issue. This does not seem like an error with my specific disc but rather something with the transfer. However, I have not read any other mentions of this online.
Anyone else seen this or can verify if it is like this on the Blu-ray? Could it be my equipment is set to some enhancement I am unaware of? I did try it on 3 different set-ups with the same results. Thanks for any input. Just curious what this is more than anything.
EDIT: Note that these are very fast screen captures not intended to be representative of the quality of the transfer, but rather just demonstrate the issue observed.
52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
- fdm
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo and Sanjuro
- cj-535
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo and Sanjuro
Sorry to resurrect such an old thread, but I thought I'd clear it up.Orlac wrote:That goof is also on the BFI BD - it looks quite different to the Criterion, with incorrect black levels, but much better contrast.Ogre Kovacs wrote:I was doing a re-watch of the 2006 DVD re-issue from Criterion and noticed something strange that I did not notice before. Right at the beginning of Chapter 8 at 32:44 into the film, there is a gentleman sweeping in front of a square backdrop. The edge of him appears squared out like the background. I took some fast screen shots to show the issue. This does not seem like an error with my specific disc but rather something with the transfer. However, I have not read any other mentions of this online.
Anyone else seen this or can verify if it is like this on the Blu-ray? Could it be my equipment is set to some enhancement I am unaware of? I did try it on 3 different set-ups with the same results. Thanks for any input. Just curious what this is more than anything.
EDIT: Note that these are very fast screen captures not intended to be representative of the quality of the transfer, but rather just demonstrate the issue observed.
It's not any sort of goof or issue with the transfer, just how it was shot.
Those windows are actually very narrow, just slits really. They appear wider during the pan as the shutter is open for a finite amount of time during each frame, and the camera is moving, so the image of the slit moves too, exposing a greater area of film (or leaving a trail if you like). Therefore, if the man sweeping is blocking the slit while the shutter is open, then no trail will be left, leaving a whole 'rectangle' appearing dark, compared to the surrounding windows. Hope that makes any sort of sense.
- Adam X
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo and Sanjuro
Then how would you explain the missing part of his head? Going by this cap, it looks very much like an encoding error and not an optical anomaly, where the software has failed to recognise where the actor stops and the background begins; and no one went back to fix it.
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Orlac
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo and Sanjuro
If anyone has the old non-anamorphic BFI disc, that should prove interesting.
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Orlac
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo and Sanjuro
And UPDATE: the non-anamorphic BFI DVD has the same thing. So it looks like a strange error in the original filmaking, as it's on three completely different transfers.
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
Apparently in a slightly different aspect ratio, at 2.39:1 compared to the, presumably repackaged, Blu-ray edition at 2.35:1
- yoloswegmaster
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
Always great to see more Toho titles get an upgrade to 4K, though I do wish they would also upgrade their DVD only releases as well like Stray Dog or Red Beard. Hell, I would love to see Toho titles that they haven't released yet like Under the Blossoming Cherry Trees or the non-Godzilla Honda films that are on the channel.
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
I’d take Red Beard over these any day. Oh well. It’s what sells, I guess.
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
I agree. But must admit I find Sanjuro rather endearing, with great silent era star Takako Irie thoroughly taming Mifune. Yojimbo is WAY too nihilistic for me to love.denti alligator wrote: Wed Oct 16, 2024 12:50 am I’d take Red Beard over these any day. Oh well. It’s what sells, I guess.
- Mr Sausage
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
Yojimbo finally clicked for me when I realized it was a black comedy, but it's never been a favourite. Sanjuro, tho', I've always been a fan of. It's likeable and charming, with more excitement than the fairly action-less Yojimbo.
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
Sanjuro also has one of the most jaw dropping final shots. I also prefer it to Yojimbo and think it's one of Kurosawa's most effortlessly entertaining and briskly paced films.
- Mr.DarjeelingLimited
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
Very glad these are getting 4K upgrades. Yojimbo is very important to me and it’s very dear to my heart. Sanjuro is a blast as well.
The character of Sanjuro is Mifune’s best role imho as well
The character of Sanjuro is Mifune’s best role imho as well
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
I have to agree that Sanjuro is a far superior film to Yojimbo.
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
The blood hose certainly helps
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Re: 52-53 Yojimbo / Sanjuro: Two Samurai Films by Akira Kurosawa
Yojimbo (which I had seen on TV) was possibly the first "hey, I know that reference!" I spotted in a film, when I saw The Bodyguard with my family at the cinema.
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Home Video Revisionism Gone Wild
The monochrome look really bothered me with this one for some reason. It really flattens the image out compared to the higher contrast in previous presentations (including a screening I went to), though I guess some details are a bit more apparent, like clouds in the sky. I have BFI's Blu-ray for High and Low and it's the same thing there, too (with some grain management). For some reason, this didn't stick out to me with Seven Samurai, but it's become more apparent with these other presentations. Both are still technically better than the old Criterion Blu-rays, though.nicolas wrote: Wed Jan 08, 2025 9:59 pm Yojimbo by Criterion is a great upgrade to their old BD. They’re using the Toho master, which is fine but has some grain management and it was graded to look rather monochrome.
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nicolas
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Re: UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
Thanks for the info. I’ve already got a chance to see the new grade when Toho released their 4K and agree with your sentiment. I was hoping that Criterion would improve the master after their fantastic damage cleanup for Seven Samurai. Hopefully BFI are the saving grace as they’re putting out Yojimbo and Sanjuro with HDR / Dolby Vision. Based on your wording I assume grain management isn’t a concern at the very least with these two?cdnchris wrote: Fri Jan 10, 2025 2:32 pmThe monochrome look really bothered me with this one for some reason. It really flattens the image out compared to the higher contrast in previous presentations (including a screening I went to), though I guess some details are a bit more apparent, like clouds in the sky. I have BFI's Blu-ray for High and Low and it's the same thing there, too (with some grain management). For some reason, this didn't stick out to me with Seven Samurai, but it's become more apparent with these other presentations. Both are still technically better than the old Criterion Blu-rays, though.nicolas wrote: Wed Jan 08, 2025 9:59 pm Yojimbo by Criterion is a great upgrade to their old BD. They’re using the Toho master, which is fine but has some grain management and it was graded to look rather monochrome.
It’d be interesting to see how High and Low turns out if Criterion puts it out in 4K and whether they’re actually able to access these Toho masters at an earlier mastering stage which some of us suspected after their Seven Samurai 4K brought back a layer of grain that Toho wiped off for their own release. Same applies to High and Low as well, which is an otherwise gorgeous 4K master.
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Orlac
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Re: UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
I always felt the Criterion BDs of these looked far too overdone in the contrast section.
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Re: UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
I remember Lee Kline mentioning that the Japanese companies tended to grade their masters flatter, less contrasty and Crirerion would have to argue with them to get them to do deeper black levels.cdnchris wrote: Fri Jan 10, 2025 2:32 pmThe monochrome look really bothered me with this one for some reason. It really flattens the image out compared to the higher contrast in previous presentations (including a screening I went to), though I guess some details are a bit more apparent, like clouds in the sky. I have BFI's Blu-ray for High and Low and it's the same thing there, too (with some grain management). For some reason, this didn't stick out to me with Seven Samurai, but it's become more apparent with these other presentations. Both are still technically better than the old Criterion Blu-rays, though.nicolas wrote: Wed Jan 08, 2025 9:59 pm Yojimbo by Criterion is a great upgrade to their old BD. They’re using the Toho master, which is fine but has some grain management and it was graded to look rather monochrome.
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Re: UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
When Masters of Cinema was regularly releasing black and white Japanese movies, they always favored this low-contrast look as more faithful to the original look while Criterion always likes to push the contrast range from pure white to pure black.dwk wrote: Fri Jan 10, 2025 8:11 pm I remember Lee Kline mentioning that the Japanese companies tended to grade their masters flatter, less contrasty and Criterion would have to argue with them to get them to do deeper black levels.
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Revisionism Gone Wild
But wasn't the justification here that MOC was taking the masters and using them "as is"? I felt like MOC was defending a more hands-off approach, which doesn't necessarily mean it was historically accurate, especially if the masters they weren't touching were actually just dated/inaccurate?Matt wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2025 10:43 pmWhen Masters of Cinema was regularly releasing black and white Japanese movies, they always favored this low-contrast look as more faithful to the original look while Criterion always likes to push the contrast range from pure white to pure black.dwk wrote: Fri Jan 10, 2025 8:11 pm I remember Lee Kline mentioning that the Japanese companies tended to grade their masters flatter, less contrasty and Criterion would have to argue with them to get them to do deeper black levels.
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Re: UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
Sigh…the good old days…Matt wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2025 10:43 pm When Masters of Cinema was regularly releasing black and white Japanese movies
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UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
Drucker, I guess I meant to say that MoC was given the low-contrast masters and told by the Japanese studios that they reflected the authentic look of the originals. Then MoC repeated that as justification for not tinkering with the masters.
- Drucker
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Re: UHD New Releases, Reissues and Upgrades
Ah fair enough!

